Black Liberation History Archive1700s – Present

The struggle for Black Liberation in the US is the the second oldest anti-oppression struggle in the United States of America. Only the struggle of the indigenous native people’s is older. However, it was the kidnapping of millions of Black Africans to the early British Colonies in North American that started the defining dynamic that allowed for the early accumulation of capital through the institution of chattel slavery, both as an exploitive form of labor and in terms of the slave trade itself. Slavery, and that which flowed from it: the establishment of the color line in society; segregation and the struggles against it, and the role of the Black working class in the class struggle have all made the Black Question the question in terms of understanding capitalism and Imperialism in the United States to this day. Offered below are links that deal with all manner of this question mostly, though not exclusively, from a Marxist and Socialist perspective.

Leading Activists and Organizations in Black Liberation

The Black Panthers represented one of the first organized attempts in U.S. history to militantly struggle for racial and working class emancipation – a party which inherited the teachings from Malcolm X to Mao Tse-Tung, and set on their agenda the revolutionary establishment of real economic, social, and political equality across gender and color lines.

Revolutionary Black nationalist freedom fighter; Muslim Minister, formerly of the Nation of Islam, which he helped build from an organisation of hundreds to hundreds of thousands. Gave definition to the term Black Nationalism more than any other activist in the 1960s. Assassinated in 1965.

Currently 3 speeches by Martin L. King, Jr., in MP3 format are available at this time. This section will cover the battle for civil rights in the 1940s, 50s and 60s.

James was born in Trinadad and was won to the communist movement in the early 1930s. Joining the U.S. Socialist Workers Party he became a Party spokesperson not only anti-racist issues and Black Liberation generally but on the whole pantheon of Marxist theory from Political Economy to Philosophy.

He is best known as the main theorist of the African American National Question within the CPUSA. Specifically, Haywood developed the theory that African Americans make up an oppressed nation in the Black Belt region of the South where they have the right to self-determination, up to and including the right to independence. Harry Haywood led the CP's work in the African American national movement for some time, both as the Chair of the CP's Negro Commission and as the General Secretary of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, where he was instrumental in organizing the Sharecroppers Union and the Scottsboro defense. He lived for four and half years in the Soviet Union where he helped to author the 1928 and 1930 Comintern Resolutions on the African American National Question

Black Periodicals

Early Communist & Socialist Documents & Writers on Black Liberation

A novel depicting the brutality of racist peonage labor and chain gangs, was serialized several newspapers, including the Daily Worker and the Des Moines Tribune. Soon after it appeared in 1932, an academic study called it “a second Uncle Tom’s Cabin, an indictment of peonage and convict-labor in Georgia, powerful enough to put to shame all the rhapsodists of the folk Negro's happy state.”